Clinical Trial: A Phase I Study of Pyrimethamine in Patients With GM2 Gangliosidosis

Study Status: Withdrawn
Recruit Status: Withdrawn
Study Type: Interventional

Official Title: A Dose-Escalated, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Phase I Clinical Trial of Pyrimethamine in Patients Affected With Chronic GM2 Gangliosidosis (Tay-Sachs or S

Brief Summary:

Adult Tay-Sachs disease and Sandhoff diseases are caused by deficiency of an enzyme called β-hexosaminidase A, or Hex A in short. This enzyme is located in a particular cellular component, called lysosomes, inside the brain cells. The reason that Hex A of patients with Adult Tay-Sachs disease or Sandhoff disease is deficient is because this enzyme had gone through mutation, resulting in it not working very well. In healthy people, Hex A efficiently breaks down GM2-ganglioside, which is a by-product from cells of our body. However, patients with Adult Tay-Sachs disease or Sandhoff disease cannot efficiently break down GM2-ganglioside in the body. Therefore, these patients have high levels of this by-product in the brain cells, which causes the brain to be unable to function normally.

There is a drug called Pyrimethamine. This drug is used by doctors to treat specific types of infections called malaria and toxoplasmosis. Our laboratory test tube studies have shown that Pyrimethamine can help the Hex A enzyme to function in a normal manner. If Hex A can function normally in presence of Pyrimethamine, this drug should be able restore the brain malfunction of these patients since Hex A can now efficiently break down GM2-ganglioside with Pyrimethamine treatment.

Although results from laboratory test tube studies are promising and Pyrimethamine should theoretically restore brain function of these patients, we do not know if Pyrimethamine is safe or if it would actually work in patients. This study is the first study (a Phase I study) of testing Pyrimethamine to treat Adult Tay-Sachs and Sandhoff diseases. The objective of this study is to see if Pyrimethamine is safe in these patients and to see if it can restore the brain function of these patients.


Detailed Summary:

Adult Tay-Sachs (TSD) and Sandhoff disease (SD) result from a deficiency of lysosomal heterodimeric β-hexosaminidase A (Hex A, αβ). These disorders are characterized by progressive neurological deterioration that mainly affects motor, cerebral and spinocerebellar function. They affect fewer than 1000 people in the United States. There is no effective treatment for these diseases.

Substantial evidence supports a disease model for TSD and SD which attributes pathology to decreased or absent Hex A levels in neuronal lysosomes of the brain. The problem in GM2 - gangliosidosis is the inability of the cell to metabolize GM2 gangliosides. When the residual activity of Hex A falls below a critical threshold level, GM2 ganglioside influx into the lysosome (the site of Hex A activity) exceeds the degradation rate and excess substrate continuously accumulates. Consequently, the lysosomes increase in size and number, giving rise to a storage disease.

The majority of the mutations in Hex A affect the ability of the enzyme to obtain and/or retain its native 3-dimensional fold in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) where intracellular quality control is performed to retain and degrade defective enzymes. Pharmacological chaperones (PC)s are small molecules that can stabilize the native conformation of a mutant enzyme in the ER and allow it to escape the ER's quality control system and its associated degradation pathway (ERAD). PCs have the potential to act as drugs when they can stabilize the native conformation of a mutant enzyme.

In 2006 ExSAR applied for orphan drug designation from the FDA for Pyrimethamine (Pyrimethamine) for the treatment of patients affected with late-onset GM2-gangliosidosis. The application is pending the positive outcome of clinical trials. Pyrimethamin
Sponsor: Exsar Corporation

Current Primary Outcome: The primary outcome measure is safety and tolerability, based on conventional laboratory and clinical assessments. [ Time Frame: The primary outcome measure, which is safety and tolerability, will be assessed weekly during the 8-week treatment period and biweekly during the 4-week post-treatment period. ]

Original Primary Outcome: Same as current

Current Secondary Outcome: The secondary outcome measure is to assess changes in β-hexosaminidase A and B activities in plasma and peripheral blood leukocytes. [ Time Frame: The secondary outcome measure will be assessed weekly during the 4-week treatment period and at the end of the 4-week post-treatment period. ]

Original Secondary Outcome: Same as current

Information By: Exsar Corporation

Dates:
Date Received: May 15, 2008
Date Started: May 2008
Date Completion:
Last Updated: February 21, 2013
Last Verified: February 2013